All Stories

  1. Attachment security is associated with mindful dreaming
  2. Childhood sexual abuse and attachment insecurities as predictors of women's own and perceived-partner extradyadic involvement
  3. Childhood Sexual Abuse and Intimate Partner Violence in a Clinical Sample of Men: The Mediating Roles of Adult Attachment and Anger Management
  4. When sex goes wrong: A behavioral systems perspective on individual differences in sexual attitudes, motives, feelings, and behaviors.
  5. Promoting Attachment-Related Mindfulness and Compassion: a Wait-List-Controlled Study of Women Who Were Mistreated During Childhood
  6. Attachment-Related Consequences of War Captivity and Trajectories of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A 17-Year Longitudinal Study
  7. Mechanisms of social connection: From brain to group.
  8. Multi-Situational Coping Strategies Scale--Modified
  9. Introduction.
  10. Attachment bonds in romantic relationships.
  11. Mediators of the Link Between Adult Attachment and Mindfulness
  12. Attachment Insecurities and Women's Sexual Function and Satisfaction: The Mediating Roles of Sexual Self-Esteem, Sexual Anxiety, and Sexual Assertiveness
  13. An Attachment Perspective on Prosocial Attitudes and Behavior
  14. An Attachment Perspective on Loneliness
  15. Contributions of attachment theory and research: A framework for future research, translation, and policy
  16. Intrusiveness from an attachment theory perspective: A dyadic diary study
  17. Dispositional Attachment Orientations, Contextual Variations in Attachment Security, and Compassion Fatigue Among Volunteers Working With Traumatized Individuals
  18. Comparing Attachment Theory and Buddhist Psychology
  19. Attachment Theory as a Framework for a Positive Psychology of Love
  20. Sexuality Examined Through the Lens of Attachment Theory: Attachment, Caregiving, and Sexual Satisfaction
  21. Can security-enhancing interventions overcome psychological barriers to responsiveness in couple relationships?
  22. The Role of Attachment Security in Adolescent and Adult Close Relationships
  23. An Attachment Perspective on Therapeutic Processes and Outcomes
  24. Attachment Orientations and Reactions to Ostracism in Close Relationships and Groups
  25. Attachment Orientations and Meaning in Life
  26. Effect of Attachment Insecurities on the Neural Pain System
  27. Adult Attachment and Happiness: Individual Differences in the Experience and Consequences of Positive Emotions
  28. The Contributions of Attachment and Caregiving Orientations to Living a Meaningful Life
  29. Children's Memory of an Attachment-Evoking Stressful Event
  30. Self-reported mindfulness and cortisol during a Shamatha meditation retreat.
  31. Attachment Processes in Relationships: Reply to Commentaries
  32. Adult Attachment Orientations and Relationship Processes
  33. Pets as safe havens and secure bases: The moderating role of pet attachment orientations
  34. Romantic Attachment Insecurity Predicts Sexual Dissatisfaction in Couples Seeking Marital Therapy
  35. Standoffish Perhaps, but Successful as Well: Evidence That Avoidant Attachment Can Be Beneficial in Professional Tennis and Computer Science
  36. Contemplative/emotion training reduces negative emotional behavior and promotes prosocial responses.
  37. Attachment Theory Expanded
  38. An attachment perspective on psychopathology
  39. Book Review: Understanding the Antecedents, Consequences, and Development of Morality in a Seemingly Immoral World The Social Psychology of Morality: Exploring the Causes of Good and Evil . Edited by Mario Mikulincer and Phillip R. Shaver , 2012. Wash...
  40. Adult Attachment and Sexuality
  41. Evidence that avoidant attachment can be beneficial in professional tennis and computer science
  42. The social psychology of morality: Exploring the causes of good and evil.
  43. Meaning, mortality, and choice: The social psychology of existential concerns.
  44. An attachment perspective on morality: Strengthening authentic forms of moral decision making.
  45. Helplessness: A hidden liability associated with failed defenses against awareness of death.
  46. An attachment perspective on coping with existential concerns.
  47. Spiritual modeling self-efficacy.
  48. Experimental findings on God as an attachment figure: Normative processes and moderating effects of internal working models.
  49. Intensive training induces longitudinal changes in meditation state-related EEG oscillatory activity
  50. Trajectories of Attachment Insecurities Over a 17-Year Period: A Latent Growth Curve Analysis of the Impact of War Captivity and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
  51. Pet in the therapy room: An attachment perspective on Animal-Assisted Therapy
  52. Adult Attachment and CaregivingIndividual Differences in Providing a Safe Haven and Secure Base to Others
  53. An attachment perspective on human–pet relationships: Conceptualization and assessment of pet attachment orientations
  54. Influence of family of origin and adult romantic partners on romantic attachment security.
  55. Childhood Maltreatment, Adult Attachment, and Depression as Predictors of Parental Self-Efficacy in At-Risk Mothers
  56. Attachment insecurities and the processing of threat-related information: Studying the schemas involved in insecure people's coping strategies.
  57. Intensive meditation training, immune cell telomerase activity, and psychological mediators
  58. The effects of implicit and explicit security priming on creative problem solving
  59. Enhanced response inhibition during intensive meditation training predicts improvements in self-reported adaptive socioemotional functioning.
  60. Toward relationship-based child welfare services
  61. Individual differences in adult attachment are systematically related to dream narratives
  62. Human aggression and violence: Causes, manifestations, and consequences.
  63. Attachment, anger, and aggression.
  64. A behavioral systems perspective on power and aggression.
  65. Attachment insecurities and interpersonal processes in Spanish couples: A dyadic approach
  66. An Attachment‐Theory Framework for Conceptualizing Interpersonal Behavior
  67. Attachment, parental incarceration and possibilities for intervention: An overview
  68. An attachment perspective on incarcerated parents and their children
  69. A computational approach to understanding the longitudinal changes in cortical activity associated with intensive meditation training
  70. My Appreciation of Caryl Rusbult
  71. Autonomy–proximity imbalance: An attachment theory perspective on intrusiveness in romantic relationships
  72. Book Review: Theory and Practice
  73. The pushes and pulls of close relationships: Attachment insecurities and relational ambivalence.
  74. A Scale to Measure Nonattachment: A Buddhist Complement to Western Research on Attachment and Adaptive Functioning
  75. Together in pain: Attachment-related dyadic processes and posttraumatic stress disorder.
  76. Caregiving System Scale
  77. Prosocial motives, emotions, and behavior: The better angels of our nature.
  78. Nonattachment Predicts Lower Levels of Closed-Mindedness and Anti-Arab Discrimination
  79. A behavioral-systems perspective on prosocial behavior.
  80. Does gratitude promote prosocial behavior? The moderating role of attachment security.
  81. Response inhibition enhanced by meditation training predicts improved adaptive functioning
  82. Attachment, authenticity, and honesty: Dispositional and experimentally induced security can reduce self- and other-deception.
  83. Attachment, Perceived Conflict, and Couple Satisfaction: Test of a Mediational Dyadic Model
  84. Mind–Behavior Relations in Attachment Theory and Research
  85. What’s inside the minds of securely and insecurely attached people? The secure-base script and its associations with attachment-style dimensions.
  86. Understanding and Altering Hurt Feelings: An Attachment-Theoretical Perspective on the Generation and Regulation of Emotions
  87. Attachment, attention, and cognitive control: Attachment style and performance on general attention tasks
  88. How does one become spiritual? The Spiritual Modeling Inventory of Life Environments (SMILE)
  89. Experimentally Induced Security Influences Responses to Psychological Pain
  90. Mario Mikulincer, Phillip R. Shaver: Attachment in Adulthood: Structure, Dynamics and Change
  91. Attachment Theory
  92. Influence of Family of Origin and Adult Romantic Partners on Romantic Attachment Security
  93. “Can't Buy Me Love”: An Attachment Perspective on Social Support and Money as Psychological Buffers
  94. Attachment style and long‐term singlehood
  95. Adult Attachment and Cognitive and Affective Reactions to Positive and Negative Events
  96. Moving Toward a Secure Attachment Style: Can Repeated Security Priming Help?
  97. What Can Virtual Reality Teach Us About Prosocial Tendencies in Real and Virtual Environments?
  98. Adult Attachment Theory, Emotion Regulation, and Prosocial Behavior
  99. Commentary on “Is There a Drive to Love?”
  100. Influence of family of origin and adult romantic partners on romantic attachment security.
  101. Psychometric Properties of the Spanish and American Versions of the ECR Adult Attachment Questionnaire
  102. Mothers' Attachment Style, Their Mental Health, and Their Children's Emotional Vulnerabilities: A 7‐Year Study of Children With Congenital Heart Disease
  103. Social Foundations of the Capacity for Mindfulness: An Attachment Perspective
  104. Leaders as attachment figures: Leaders' attachment orientations predict leadership-related mental representations and followers' performance and mental health.
  105. Attachment, sexual experience, and sexual pressure in romantic relationships: A dyadic approach
  106. Boosting Attachment Security to Promote Mental Health, Prosocial Values, and Inter-Group Tolerance
  107. Reflections on Security Dynamics: Core Constructs, Psychological Mechanisms, Relational Contexts, and the Need for an Integrative Theory
  108. Effects of attachment style and relationship context on selection among relational strategies
  109. How affect regulation moderates the association between anxious attachment and neuroticism
  110. Does Subliminal Exposure to Sexual Stimuli Have the Same Effects on Men and Women?
  111. Attachment, Group–Related Processes, and Psychotherapy
  112. Insecure attachment and personality disorder: a twin study of adults
  113. A Spanish version of the Experiences in Close Relationships (ECR) adult attachment questionnaire
  114. Attachment Styles
  115. A measure of relationship behaviors
  116. Attachment Security and the Use of God as a Safe Haven: New Experimental Findings
  117. Sexuality and Attachment in Dating Relationships
  118. Avoidant attachment predicts directing attention away from threatening words
  119. Individual differences in the functioning of the sexual behavior system and their interplay with the attachment and caregiving systems
  120. More evidence for a security system model of attachment, self-esteem, and worldviews: The effects of security boosts on defensiveness
  121. “I can’t get no satisfaction”: Insecure attachment, inhibited sexual communication, and sexual dissatisfaction
  122. Structure of the Basque emotion lexicon
  123. Self-Reported Attachment, Interpersonal Aggression, and Personality Disorder in a Prospective Community Sample of Adolescents and Adults
  124. Attachment Theory, Individual Psychodynamics, and Relationship Functioning
  125. Attachment dimensions and the big five personality traits: Associations and comparative ability to predict relationship quality
  126. Attachment theory and forgiveness
  127. Attachment style and the regulation of negative emotions: Behavioral and fMRI evidence
  128. Attachment Bases of Emotion Regulation and Posttraumatic Adjustment.
  129. Attachment, caregiving, and volunteering: Placing volunteerism in an attachment-theoretical framework
  130. Attachment-style differences in the ability to suppress negative thoughts: Exploring the neural correlates
  131. Attachment, Caregiving, and Altruism: Boosting Attachment Security Increases Compassion and Helping.
  132. Patterns of Nonverbal Behavior and Sensivity in the Context of Attachment Relations
  133. Attachment theory and emotions in close relationships: Exploring the attachment-related dynamics of emotional reactions to relational events
  134. Attachment, Self-Esteem, Worldviews, and Terror Management: Evidence for a Tripartite Security System.
  135. Worldwide, economic development and gender equality correlate with liberal sexual attitudes and behavior: What does this tell us about evolutionary psychology?
  136. Attachment theory and research: Resurrection of the psychodynamic approach to personality
  137. Rorschach Correlates of Self-Reported Attachment Dimensions: Dynamic Manifestations of Hyperactivating and Deactivating Strategies
  138. Attachment Security, Compassion, and Altruism
  139. Selfobject Needs Inventory
  140. The Final Word: The Therapeutic Payoff for Careful Theory and Research on Attachment
  141. "Selfobject" Needs in Kohut's Self Psychology: Links With Attachment, Self-Cohesion, Affect Regulation, and Adjustment.
  142. Attachment in the later years: A commentary
  143. Attachment-Related Strategies During Thought Suppression: Ironic Rebounds and Vulnerable Self-Representations.
  144. Avoidant attachment and hemispheric lateralisation of the processing of attachment‐ and emotion‐related words
  145. Attachment Style and Subjective Motivations for Sex
  146. Individual Differences in Emotional Complexity: Their Psychological Implications
  147. Attachment dimensions and sexual motives
  148. Adult attachment style and parental responsiveness during a stressful event
  149. Attachment, sexuality, and caregiving
  150. Attachment dimensions and sexual motives
  151. Attachment-Related Strategies During Thought Suppression: Rebounds and Self-Representations
  152. Attachment and sexual motivations and behaviors
  153. The Dating Survey VII: Sex in Our Relationships
  154. Structure of Emotion Lexicons Across Cultures: Why So Similar?
  155. Attachment, self-esteem, worldviews, and terror management: Preliminary evidence for a tripartite security system
  156. Talk title: Attachment security, compassion, and altruistic helping
  157. Automatic activation of attachment-related goals: The case of self-disclosure and support seeking
  158. Culture-Specific Patterns in the Prediction of Life Satisfaction: Roles of Emotion, Relationship Quality, and Self-Esteem
  159. Physical, Emotional, and Behavioral Reactions to Breaking Up: The Roles of Gender, Age, Emotional Involvement, and Attachment Style
  160. The Dating Survey IV: Breaking Up
  161. The Attachment Behavioral System In Adulthood: Activation, Psychodynamics, And Interpersonal Processes
  162. Insecure Attachment, Gender Roles, and Interpersonal Dependency in the Basque Country
  163. The role of attachment and cognitive inhibition in children’s memory and suggestibility for a stressful event
  164. Dialogue on adult attachment: Diversity and integration
  165. Attachment-related psychodynamics
  166. Respect in close relationships: Prototype definition, self‐report assessment, and initial correlates
  167. Activation of the attachment system in adulthood: Threat-related primes increase the accessibility of mental representations of attachment figures.
  168. Structure of the Indonesian Emotion Lexicon
  169. COMMENTARIES
  170. Attachment theory and intergroup bias: Evidence that priming the secure base schema attenuates negative reactions to out-groups.
  171. Emotion, attachment, and bereavement: A conceptual commentary.
  172. Adult attachment and the defensive regulation of attention and memory: Examining the role of preemptive and postemptive defensive processes.
  173. Adult Romantic Attachment: Theoretical Developments, Emerging Controversies, and Unanswered Questions
  174. The adult attachment interview and self‐reports of romantic attachment: Associations across domains and methods
  175. 10.1146/annurev.psych.093008.100452
  176. Romantic Initiation Questionnaire
  177. Attachment Processes and Commitment to Romantic Relationships
  178. Airport separations: A naturalistic study of adult attachment dynamics in separating couples.
  179. Attachment Styles and Personality Disorders: Their Connections to Each Other and to Parental Divorce, Parental Death, and Perceptions of Parental Caregiving
  180. Correlates of Multiple Forms of Victimization in Religion-Related Child Abuse Cases
  181. Attachment styles and parental representations.
  182. What it means to be female
  183. What it means to be female
  184. Attachment styles, emotion regulation, and adjustment in adolescence.
  185. Adult attachment in a nationally representative sample.
  186. Children's religious knowledge: Implications for understanding satanic ritual abuse allegations
  187. Media Exposure Checklist
  188. Children's Knowledge Questionnaire
  189. Adult attachment and the suppression of unwanted thoughts.
  190. Goal Structures in Creative Motivation
  191. Is love a “basic” emotion?
  192. An analysis of ritualistic and religion-related child abuse allegations.
  193. Attachment, attractiveness, and social interaction: A diary study.
  194. One Rendition of Evolutionary Psychology
  195. In the Name of God: A Profile of Religion‐Related Child Abuse
  196. Implicit Leadership Theories: Prototypes for New Leaders
  197. The Importance of Nongenetic Influences on Romantic Love Styles: A Twin-Family Study
  198. Attachment Styles and Parental Divorce
  199. Attachment as an Organizational Framework for Research on Close Relationships
  200. Broken Attachments: Relationship Loss From the Perspective of Attachment Theory
  201. Preface
  202. Measures of Depression and Loneliness
  203. Criteria for Scale Selection and Evaluation
  204. The search for a definition of psychological maltreatment
  205. Attachment Theory and Religion: Childhood Attachments, Religious Beliefs, and Conversion
  206. Love and work: An attachment-theoretical perspective.
  207. How Emotions Develop and How they Organise Development
  208. Determinants of the Child Victim’s Perceived Credibility
  209. Sex and Gender: Review of Personality and Social Psychology, Phillip Shaver and Clyde Hendrick, eds. 1986. Sage Publications, Inc., Beverly Hills, CA. 328 pages. $29.95
  210. Fear and Affiliation Reconsidered from a Stress and Coping Perspective: The Importance of Cognitive Clarity and Fear Reduction
  211. Sex and Gender. Volume 7 in Review of Personality and Social Psychology Series
  212. Love-Experience Scales
  213. Romantic love conceptualized as an attachment process.
  214. Emotion knowledge: Further exploration of a prototype approach.
  215. Consciousness Without the Body
  216. Self, Situations, and Social Behavior: Review of Personality and Social Psychology, No. 6
  217. The Social Self: Group Influences on Personal Identity.
  218. A General Attribution Theory for the Psychology of Religion
  219. Incompatibility, Loneliness, and “Limerence”
  220. Adolescents' theories about the development of their relationships with parents.
  221. "Difficult" Children as Elicitors and Targets of Adult Communication Patterns: An Attributional-Behavioral Transactional Analysis
  222. Loneliness, Sex-Role Orientation and Group Life: A Social Needs Perspective
  223. Masculinity, femininity, academic performance, and health: Further evidence concerning the androgyny controversy1
  224. Objective measurement of fear of success and fear of failure: A factor analytic approach.
  225. Looking Back at Oneself in Time: Another Approach to the Actor-Observer Phenomenon
  226. Social facilitation of word associations: Further questions.
  227. Questions concerning fear of success and its conceptual relatives
  228. Explorations in the Drive Theory of Social Facilitation
  229. Measures of Social Psychological Attitudes.
  230. Cognitive consequences of self-awareness
  231. Foundations of Interpersonal Attraction. Ted L. Huston
  232. Sex-role traditionalism and fear of success
  233. Attribution Theory and the Psychology of Religion
  234. Conflict Between Firemen and Ghetto Dwellers: Environmental and Attitudinal Factors1
  235. Shaver Replies To Tajfel
  236. Unsolved problems for self-awareness theory: A reply to Wicklund
  237. Impact of coeducation on "fear of success" imagery expressed by male and female high school students.
  238. Self-awareness and cigarette-smoking behavior
  239. European Perspectives on the Crisis in Social Psychology
  240. Converging evidence for the functional significance of imagery in problem solving
  241. Intrapsychic versus cultural explanations of the "fear of success" motive.
  242. Evaluation, self-awareness, and task performance
  243. Two More Attempts to Introduce Social Psychology
  244. Cognition and Affect
  245. Problems facing Campbell's "experimenting society."
  246. Correlates of heterosexuals' reactions to pornography
  247. Sex
  248. Birth Order of Medical Students and the Occupational Ambitions of Their parents
  249. SPSSI members favor rapid disengagement in Vietnam
  250. Transformation of Social Identity: A Study of Chronic Mental Patients and College Volunteers In a Summer Camp Setting
  251. Color association values and response interference on variants of the Stroop test
  252. Attachment Theory
  253. A Behavioral Systems Perspective on Compassionate Love
  254. Attachment theory: I. Motivational, individual-differences and structural aspects
  255. Attachment theory: II. Developmental, psychodynamic and optimal-functioning aspects
  256. Attachment Theory
  257. The psychodynamics of adult romantic attachment.